Act 102 Black and White

After agreeing on the time of the first delivery, Doug sent Drake away.

Snowflakes fell in the sky again. Looking into the distance along the road at the entrance of the printing and dyeing factory, in the white expanse, a thin newsboy is still desperately selling.

At the other end of the city in New Haven, Roman, who had just entered the room, stamped his foot, took off his felt hat on his head, and slapped off the snow on it.

This is the twentieth day since the former editor-in-chief of the New Haven Daily Newspaper left, and in those twenty days, Roman's life has been painful and happy.

Happily, the press release of her interview was finally published in the newspaper with her name on it.

Painfully, the New Haven Daily News was left in a rather chaotic situation without the control of its former editor-in-chief.

And she, although valued by the boss. But the press release she wrote did not respect her heart so much.

"The Black-Hearted Boss Actually Killed a Child Hired Worker!"

"Monopoly" is like this, do you still dare to buy it?"

The Life of the Villain Doug Claydon

……

Such a title is not a good title in her opinion.

The content under the title, in her opinion, although it is a fact, does not go against her original intention, but it is only a partial fact.

Except for the first two days before the editor-in-chief Carlton left, for the remaining 18 days, almost every day the New Haven Daily News had to report in a prominent position on Doug Claydon's black material, report on Doug Claydon's cruel use of child labor, prevent adult female workers from sleeping, and even at night, the lights in the printing and dyeing factory were never extinguished.

The accumulation of one-sided facts made Roman, who was writing the manuscript, feel a little scary, is there really such a demon in New Haven?

It's just that the effect of the report did not include Gilbert and Anton and others as expected, and overnight Doug Claydon became a rat that everyone shouted at.

After all, these people who are willing to buy newspapers and can read them are somehow more "sensible".

As long as the news reported in the newspapers is not closely related to their self-confident interests, they will not be easily incited.

And what Doug did in the report did not infringe on these newspaper readers.

As for whether the female workers are urged to get up in the middle of the night by Doug learning to crow every night, and whether the child laborers are paid low every day, they are not well fed and clothed, what does this have to do with them?

Even, after the "New Haven Times" was launched, these people had a more comprehensive understanding of Doug Claydon, who was tried to smear in the "New Haven Times", and actually began to agree with Doug's actions.

Coupled with the in-depth report of "The Death of the Little Shoe Shiner" in the New Haven Times, from Doug's point of view, it cuts into the life of the little shoe shiner, from meeting with the hired person to finally sentencing him to death in order to protect him, which is deeply touching and tear-jerking.

made many old men who read the newspaper shed crocodile tears.

They want to have such a follower!

They also want to have such loyal subordinates!

They even took the article "The Death of the Little Shoe Shiner" and asked someone to read it to all the employees. Tell employees that even if they are sentenced to death, they must shine their boss's shoes for the last time before they die, and be on duty for the last shift.

And after the report "The Death of the Little Shoe Shiner", there is a special report about Doug.

This article begins when Doug was a little homeless man, saying that when he was a homeless man at Yale College, he religiously went to the classroom to study despite his hunger.

His day-to-day listening behavior touched Principal Woolsey of Yale Academy.

Principal Woolsey deliberately dropped a money bag on Doug's daily lessons, hoping that the little tramp Doug would fill his stomach with the money.

However, what Principal Woolsey didn't expect was that this little homeless man actually endured hunger, found Principal Woolsey according to the name on the money bag, and returned the money bag to Principal Woolsey.

Principal Woolsey was greatly moved, and felt that although Doug was just a little tramp, he was dedicated to learning and still had an upright character.

So, in this era, Principal Woolsey, who was already a very old man in his fifties, accepted Doug as the last student.

It didn't take long for Doug to design "Monopoly", buy the factory, and go from brilliance to glory.

The core argument of this article is that people of high character are bound to succeed.

Although Doug felt that this made no sense, it was like telling a lumberjack that if he focused on logging, he could have a forest of his own.

But such a heart-warming article is still widely liked by newspaper readers.

They also added this article to the ranks of preaching, and at the same time instilled in the workers the ideas that "if you work hard, you will be rewarded handsomely" and "as long as you are a good person, you will be rewarded".

It is not like a literate and wealthy person who can satisfy his cultural life by reading, reading newspapers, enjoying plays, etc.

The vast majority of the low-level people in this era are no more entertained than those things in the crotch.

They who don't have the ability to discriminate, when they hear articles like "The Death of the Little Shoe Shiner" and "Little Tramp Doug Claydon", they even set off a trend of learning from the little shoe-shiner and Doug Claydon.

Doug returned to his office, holding a copy of the New Haven Daily and a copy of the New Haven Times on his desk, one smeared and one whitewashed.

He picked up the New Haven Daily first and wanted to see how he was hacked today.